I've mentioned this on another thread, but once you start deciding that a number is 'significant', then you start noticing it everywhere. Heck, if I were to decide that the color orange was significant, then I would tend to start noticing it more. Even if the number/color didn't naturally occur in a situation, I'd start coming up with ways that it was related. (In the 'orange' example - the sky is blue, and if you take the other two primary colors and mix them, you get orange. Ooooh, scary!)

I've mentioned this on another thread, but once you start deciding that a number is 'significant', then you start noticing it everywhere. Heck, if I were to decide that the color orange was significant, then I would tend to start noticing it more. Even if the number/color didn't naturally occur in a situation, I'd start coming up with ways that it was related. (In the 'orange' example - the sky is blue, and if you take the other two primary colors and mix them, you get orange. Ooooh, scary!)

Except the three primary colors are red, blue, and green, and the color opposite the color wheel of blue is yellow >_>

Except the three primary colors are red, blue, and green, and the color opposite the color wheel of blue is yellow >_>

Which is why the Sun looks yellowish on Earth, but white in space.

In light the three primaries are Red, Blue and Green (the additive color wheel), but in pigment they are Red, Blue and Yellow (the subtractive color wheel) . In pigment, blue's complement is orange. There we go Oniya, orange is everywhere!

In light the three primaries are Red, Blue and Green (the additive color wheel), but in pigment they are Red, Blue and Yellow (the subtractive color wheel) . In pigment, blue's complement is orange. There we go Oniya, orange is everywhere!

edited cause yeah, I can't type.

Which is what I was going with - and yes, I know that light is subtractive and would make more sense to use with anything relating to the color of the sky, but it only goes further to prove that these sort of 'X is everywhere' coincidences can rely on selective fact-usage.

Great pics, Wyrd, especially the Macho Man one - and you can't help wonder if "know the Lord" means something rather different when it's Biblical knowledge we're talking about - as in "Abraham knew his wife" (not wishing to insult Christians in general here, but then the vast majoirty of Christians don't pretend to know the future as a fact through prophesy).

In light the three primaries are Red, Blue and Green (the additive color wheel), but in pigment they are Red, Blue and Yellow (the subtractive color wheel) . In pigment, blue's complement is orange. There we go Oniya, orange is everywhere!

edited cause yeah, I can't type.

Pigments are cyan, yellow, and magenta. They are the complements of red, blue, and green respectively.